What humors me is the fact that you're supposedly going to have these wondrous tiny machines that can work at the cellular level, and you're just going to use them to deliver old-fashioned drugs? I guess medical science isn't imaginative enough to get past the existing way of doing things. It kind of reminds me when futurists used to imagine robots as humanoid devices, pulling levers and turning knobs--with it never occurring to them that it would be much more efficient to actually REPLACE the old levers and knobs altogether and let the machine be operated directly by computer.

It kind of reminds me when futurists used to imagine robots as humanoid devices, pulling levers and turning knobs--with it never occurring to them that it would be much more efficient to actually REPLACE the old levers and knobs altogether and let the machine be operated directly by computer.

Well if the robots have to co-exist with us, do we change our environment to suite them, or do we build them to suite our environment?

For example, why are all the self driving cars actually cars? Surely there is a better form factor for schlepping around people and goods. But getting to that form factor would mean tearing down our current infrastructure. Its only after we replace all the manually driven cars that we can go to the next step and build an entirely new infrastructure to replace roads.

Every now and then I check in on it, hoping they've at least made some positive changes that might make beta at least tolerable. But so far, the inability to follow your own comment threads (or even tell if you've been modded on posts) has remained consistently unavailable. They keep telling us "We're listening," but I've never seen a single change made to indicate that. Back to classic again for me.

Plenty of other things that fusion reactors could power (like the electric grid so we can cut way down on carbon emissions) and desalination plants for drought areas.And of course slower than light ships for travel within the solar system'''